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Bulls have some of their kind of fun in New Orleans

The contents of this page have not been reviewed or endorsed by the Chicago Bulls. All opinions expressed by Sam Smith are solely his own and do not reflect the opinions of the Chicago Bulls or their Basketball Operations staff, parent company, partners, or sponsors. His sources are not known to the Bulls and he has no special access to information beyond the access and privileges that go along with being an NBA accredited member of the media.

It was a tough, physical game for the Bulls Tuesday in their 96-87 victory over the New Orleans Hornets/Pelicans.

“When we play with that kind of defensive intensity, 96 (points) is plenty,” said Joakim Noah, who had his team high 27th double-double, tied for second in the East with Al Horford behind Nikola Vucevic, with 15 points and 17 rebounds in addition to five assists and three blocks.

“Joakim was everywhere,” marveled Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau. “Multiple effort plays. It probably was one of his best screening games.”

Even with advanced metrics, no one is keeping stats for screens set. So assume Noah leads the East in that category.

The Bulls front line with Luol Deng with a team high 20 points, Noah and Carlos Boozer combined for 52 points on 53 percent shooting and 32 rebounds, Noah’s 17 rebounds a Hornets/Pelicans opponent best.

“They’re a really good team,” said Hornets/Pelicans coach Monty Williams. “I thought they were physically tougher than we were. There were times when we fought. But over the long haul I thought they were really good at forcing the issue. If you remember the first game we played back in Chicago (Hornets/Pelicans win), we weren’t throwing lobs every other play. When you have a team that’s hitting you like (they do), you tend to get outside of yourselves a little. They were physically in our face all night long. So we had about four or five possessions where we couldn’t even get a shot off after to cutting it to one (with 9:08 left in the game). We just kind of gave in to their pressure. For whatever reason, they had our pick and roll offense (pushed out) almost at half court tonight. Their defense tonight was a bit more that we can handle.”

So like a tuneup before the heavyweight fight, let’s get ready to rumble!

Bulls/Heat… TNT… Thursday night.

“You just know it’s going to be crazy, the UC is going to be nuts,” said Noah, who beat two New Orleans defenders rebounder for an acrobatic (for him) left handed tip in with 6:22 left and the Bulls ahead 84-79. “That’s what you play for. You want to play against the best. They’re (Miami) No. 1 right now. We’re on the rise; we’re hungry. Let’s get it!”

Someone cue Rocky music.

“Miami, they’re a good team; we’re a good team,” said Boozer. “It’s going to be fun.”

It was fun for the Bulls, in a sense, Tuesday with the season opening starting lineup of Noah, Boozer, Deng, Richard Hamilton and Kirk Hinrich back together again with Hinrich having missed the previous seven games with a damaged bursa sac. And you’d think he’d rather carry a wallet.

Anyway, the Bulls went to 17-7 with that starting lineup, the best record of any of their fivesomes as they moved to 31-22. The Hornets/Pelicans are 19-35, though a dangerous team as they won in the United Center in November and then without rookie Anthony Davis, who put on a highlight show Tuesday with 15 points and 10 rebounds.

“We played with the right edge,” said Noah. “I felt in that (November) game they played harder than us. But I felt we played harder tonight.”

They especially believed it was the case with the return of Hinrich, who despite just five points on two of seven shooting, energized the Bulls offense with 10 of their 30 assists on 39 baskets, drew a crucial offensive foul with 1:59 left that initially was called a foul and reversed on replay, got his usual technical foul though with a bit less frothing at the mouth this time and inspired the ball movement that had nine players attempting at least five shots and a high of 16 from Boozer.

“I’ve said all along,” reiterated Thibodeau. “Sometimes it gets overlooked. When you look at Luol, he gets 13, 14 shots, Carlos gets his shots, Marco (Belinelli) and Rip get their shots. It was very well balanced. I thought Jimmy (Butler) gave us a good lift with defense. I thought Nazr (Mohammed) have us some great minutes in the first half (two of two shooting). It was a good team win. And Kirk stepped up with that big charge and Lu hit a big shot out of that side out of bounds. Carlos and Joakim got him open. Down the stretch you’ve got to make tough plays. I thought we did that.”

The shot Thibodeau was referring to was an All-Star type, the last chance defensive stop the Hornets/Pelicans had to make to have a chance to steal the game. The Bulls’ defense forced seven turnovers in the last six minutes of the game. But the Hornets had one last gasp after it seemed over when Noah banked in a left handed drive with 2:53 left for a 92-82 lead.

Greivis Vasquez scored on a drive, Deng missed a three, and then the Bulls relaxed in transition allowing Eric Gordon, who led New Orleans with 20 points, a rare, wide open look to get within 92-87 with 50.9 seconds left.

Thibodeau gathered the players in a timeout and said he wished they’d have hurried back sooner, though wasn’t it a beautiful day. OK, it didn’t go quite like that.

But staying true to his next-moment-is-the-most-important-in-life philosophy, Thibodeau designed a nice play for Deng, who came off the double screens open and pulled up for a 15-footer with 44.8 seconds left to effectively clinch the victory. It wasn’t a dramatic buzzer beater. But it nonetheless was a pressure shot with a game that could have turned against the Bulls.

And I loved earlier in the game when Deng hit a wide open three and a fan yelled to the New Orleans players — and it was easy to hear with a scattering in attendance — “Why are you 20 feet away? That’s a damn All-Star.”

Lu’s finally made it.

“We came right back and showed mental toughness,” said Thibodeau. “Carlos and Joakim’s screens were critical. I thought the level of intensity was very good. I loved the pace to start the game. I thought our defense was solid, the ball was hopping, and we were making quick decisions. We were not short cutting things, making the extra pass, setting good screens. I thought overall it was very good.”

It was an especially sharp start to the game for the Bulls with nine assists on their 12 first quarter baskets, four by Hinrich and two by Boozer as the Bulls took a 26-21 lead after one quarter, Hinrich’s penetration to close the quarter and pass out to Deng for a three a big play to end the first.

“Kirk played huge for us today,” said Noah, who was dominant on the boards early as the slightly built Davis struggled to keep him away as Noah had seven, three offensive in the first quarter. “He (Hinrich) does a lot of things you don’t see in the stat sheet that really help our club. Kirk, he brings a whole different dimension with his defensive intensity and his feel for game, the way he calls plays, his ball movement. He’s a great player.”

And Noah may be closer than anyone on the team to Nate Robinson. No offense to Robinson, who started slowly but scored four straight points in the fourth quarter after the Hornets/Pelicans had a 7-2 start to the fourth to get within 76-75. But Robinson is not a natural running the offense, though he probably is the toughest guy on the team and took another hard shot to the face early in the game and walked it off. He takes probably more of those than anyone, and despite their size you’d be doing well to have Robinson and Hinrich in a tag team match for you.

“Hinrich, he played amazing defense,” said New Orleans’ Jason Smith. “He played a hell of a game. They were just playing harder than us tonight.”

The Bulls stayed ahead, going up 47-43 at halftime with the Bulls reserves playing a strong quarter and Noah with some fancy playmaking late in the quarter. But rookie Davis from Chicago’s Perspectives Charter High School made several spectacular, athletic plays that have him stamped as a star once he puts on some weight and perhaps develops a bit more of a floor game. Though he doesn’t stay on the floor long the way he made three amazing plays up in the air in the quarter, the final one to end the half that left you shaking your head in admiration that you get a chance to watch a talent like that.

“Just incredible,” said Thibodeau. “His skill set is so unique. His timing, shotblocking, athleticism. He does a lot of things you can’t teach, great timing, quickness.”

With the Bulls starting to pull away ahead 37-28, Davis converted with one hand a lob pass from Vasquez that it appeared about to sail over the backboard. Then Davis went diving out of bounds and directed a pass back to Gordon for a three that caught the Bulls apparently thinking there was no way anyone could get to that ball. For me, the best was last, though Thibodeau seemed to take a somewhat dimmer view as he stalked off the court at halftime while Noah angrily slammed the ball down in disbelief.

After a Hinrich jumper with 4.8 seconds left in the first half to put the Bulls ahead 47-40, Davis streaked downcourt. Vasquez spiraled a fullcourt pass with Davis whizzing by the speedy Noah. Davis appeared to have his back to the basket as he was flying past it and in one motion caught the ball and reached back and put it in with Noah fouling him for a three-point play with 1.6 seconds left.

Bulls players didn’t know whether to curse or cheer seeing a play like that. No one said anything about Bulls coaches, or one in particular.

“He’s a great player,” said Noah. “He has a great feel for the game. Very talented. I really like the way he plays the game, unselfish. You can tell he plays the game the right way. Especially the way he runs in transition. He’s going to be a force for a long time.”

Perhaps the Bulls as well as they got some hopeful signs Monday with Derrick Rose looking good in a rare five-on-five scrimmage the Bulls began having to accommodate Rose. Though Rose last week left open the possibility of not playing this season — and there is debate on both sides of the issue — nothing really has changed as he’s still on his same schedule and still awaiting the doctor’s recommendation on whether it is appropriate to play this season or not. And, if so, when and for how long. None of that has truly been addressed officially yet, and Rose at media day last October said it will be his job in rehab to prove to the doctors and the Bulls he’s fit to play without risk of further injury. That process, as it has for the last several months, merely continues.

The Bulls came out of halftime continuing to put pressure on the Hornets/Pelicans with Hinrich sending New Orleans into a timeout down 62-52 with 6:42 left in the third after a pullup three. Then coming out of the timeout, Hinrich in the backcourt pretended to be stretching. And then when Robin Lopez inbounded the ball lazily, like most NBA players do, Hinrich jumped in to steal it, though the Bulls didn’t score in that possession. Still, it was a classic play.

“He played great tonight,” Boozer said of Hinrich. “For being out as long as he was, he came back and it was almost seamless. He did a great job of getting everybody involved, made some big plays, hit a couple of big shots for us, played great defense. He got a tough whistle tonight, but he still played great.”

Hinrich is one of the more relentless guards in the league fighting over screens, which one of the officials, Sean Wright, didn’t seem to be able to get right. Hinrich isn’t generally hesitant to explain if he believes he can help the officials. And often he doesn’t quite know when to stop. So he picked up a technical, though was not truly frothing.

“We’ve had… I’ll leave it at that,” Thibodeau stammered as he was about to discuss the Bulls’ confusion about some officiating before apparently recalling he was going shopping for more sweat pants this weekend.

Hinrich ran a beautiful two man game with Boozer late in the third for a 71-61 lead. But the Bulls relaxed late again, giving up a three-point play on a runner to Austin Rivers and Taj Gibson fouling Ryan Anderson on a three with 3.1 seconds left as the Bulls lead was cut to 74-68 after three and almost gone.

But down the stretch the Bulls made the big baskets, like Noah’s tip, Deng’s jumper, a floater from Robinson, a Boozer drive and reverse while New Orleans’ Williams screamed for his players to “move the ball!”

But if New Orleans with Davis was an irresistible force, the Bulls’ defense was that immovable object. And then something’s got to give. It was the young Pelicans-to-be.

“They play good together,” said Vasquez about the Bulls. “Playing against a team like that, you have to match their intensity because they want to punish you.”

About Sam Smith

Smith covered the Bulls and the NBA for the Chicago Tribune for 25 years. He is the author of the best selling The Jordan Rules, which was top ten on the New York Times Bestseller List for three months. He is also the author of Second Coming: The Strange Odyssey of Michael Jordan and co-author of the Total Basketball Encyclopedia. Smith served as president of the Professional Basketball Writers Association for four terms, a feat no one else has accomplished. He has also served on committees for the NBA and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. In 2012, Smith was honored by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame with its Curt Gowdy Media Award.